Yesterday, Bush signed into the law the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which effectively put a dagger in the heart of one of our most treasured rights: the right of habeus corpus.
What is habeas corpus and why should we care?
The principle of “Habeas corpus” (a Latin imperative meaning, “have the body”) allows someone who believes they have been imprisoned wrongfully to be brought to court so they can plead their case. Without this right, you can be jailed for no reason with no recourse.
So along with the San Francisco Earthquake of October 17, 1989 and New York’s worst fire before 9/11 – the 23rd Street Fire of October 17, 1966, we have a new disaster to mark 10/17 by: the day Bush signed the Military Commissions act.
On Keith Olbermann’s MSNBC show “Countdown” today, Jonathan Turley, a constitutional law professor at George Washington University, said:
This is going to go down in history as one of our greatest self-inflicted wounds. And I think you can feel the judgment of history. It won’t be kind to President Bush. But frankly I don’t think it will be kind to the rest of us. I think history will ask, where were you? What did you do when this thing was signed into law?
There were people who protested the Japanese concentration camps. There were people who protested these other acts. But we are strangely silent in this national yawn as our rights evaporate.
Media Monitors Network questions our priorities as a country:
Amidst a whirlwind of political sloganeering, mudslinging campaigns, and a Congressional scandal, the public debate concerning the recent passing of the Military Commissions Act of 2006 has remained eerily silent.
Are Mark Foley’s pedophiliac perversions more important than the human rights of world citizens and the freedoms of the American people? Will Americans continue to be distracted by a media fixated on the lurid emails of a pervert while the Bill of Rights is under attack?
Over at The Consortium, Robert Parry explains the problems with the legislation in great detail in his article titled “Shame on Us All.” This is just a tiny excerpt. See the full article for many more details:
The law strips “unlawful combatants” and their alleged fellow-travelers of the fundamental right of habeas corpus, meaning that they can’t challenge their imprisonment in civilian courts, at least not until after they are brought before a military tribunal, tried under special secrecy rules and then sentenced.
One of the catches, however, is that with habeas corpus suspended these suspects have no guarantee of a swift trial and can theoretically be jailed indefinitely at the President’s discretion. Given the endless nature of the “global war on terror,” suspects could disappear forever into the dark hole of unlimited executive authority, their fate hidden even from their families.
Thom Hartmann wrote a great article on the history of habeus corpus, which I can only briefly excerpt here:
The modern institution of civil and human rights, and particularly the writ of habeas corpus, began in June of 1215 when King John was forced by a group of feudal lords to sign the Magna Carta at Runnymede.
Two of the most critical parts of the Magna Carta were articles 38 and 39, which established the foundation for what is now known as “habeas corpus” laws (literally, “produce the body” from the Latin – meaning, broadly, “let this person go free or else give him a trial – you may not hold him forever with charging him with a crime”). The concept of habeas corpus in the Magna Carta led directly to the Fourth through Eighth Amendments of our Constitution, and hundreds of other federal and state due process provisions.
Articles 38 and 39 of the Magna Carta said:
“38 In future no official shall place a man on trial upon his own unsupported statement, without producing credible witnesses to the truth of it.“39 No free man shall be seized or imprisoned, or stripped of his rights or possessions, or outlawed or exiled, or deprived of his standing in any other way, nor will we proceed with force against him, or send others to do so, except by the lawful judgment of his equals or by the law of the land.”
This was radical stuff, and over the next four hundred years average people increasingly wanted for themselves these same protections from the abuse of governmental power that the feudal lords had gotten at Runnymede. But from 1215 to 1628, outside of the privileges enjoyed by the feudal lords, the average person could be arrested and imprisoned at the whim of the king with no recourse to the courts.
Then, in 1627, King Charles I overstepped, and the people snapped. Charles I threw into jail five knights in a tax disagreement, and the knights sued the King, asserting their habeas corpus right to be free or on bail unless convicted of a crime.
King Charles I, in response, invoked his right to simply imprison anybody he wanted (other than the rich feudal lords), anytime he wanted, as he said, “per speciale Mandatum Domini Regis.”
This is essentially the same argument that George W. Bush makes today….
…King Charles’ decree wasn’t well received. The result of his overt assault on the rights of citizens led to a sort of revolt in the British Parliament, producing the 1628 “Petition of Right” law, an early version of our Fourth through Eighth Amendments, which restated Articles 38 and 39 of the Magna Carta and added that “writs of habeas corpus, [are] there to undergo and receive [only] as the court should order.” It was later strengthened with the “Habeas Corpus Act of 1640” and a second “Habeas Corpus Act of 1679.”
People often bring up Abraham Lincoln’s suspension of habeas corpus. But Hartmann puts it in context, and context is everything:
Article I of the Constitution outlines the powers and limits of the Legislative Branch of government (Article 2 lays out the Executive Branch, and Article 3 defines the Judicial Branch). In Section 9, Clause 2 of Article I, the Constitution says of the Legislative branch’s authority: “The Privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.”
Abraham Lincoln was well aware of this during the Civil War, and was the first president to successfully ask Congress (on March 3, 1863) to suspend habeas corpus so he could imprison those he considered a threat until the war was over. Congress invoked this power again during Reconstruction when President Grant requested The Ku Klux Klan Act in 1871 to put down a rebellion in South Carolina.
But there is no “Rebellion or Invasion” going on in America right now.
Historians need to remind our fellow citizens how hard it was to win these rights and how, if history tells us anything, it is that we must constantly battle to protect them. There will always be those who step forward to assert King-like rights over the rest of us if we cower in the corner or worse, lounge in front of some vapid TV show when our constitution is under attack.
Who is more of a threat to America? Terrorists, or George Bush? And how can we tell which is which?
As Parry said, in closing:
In signing the Military Commissions Act of 2006, Bush remarked that “one of the terrorists believed to have planned the 9/11 attacks said he hoped the attacks would be the beginning of the end of America.” Pausing for dramatic effect, Bush added, “He didn’t get his wish.”
Or, perhaps, the terrorist did.
Use it or lose it. I’m talking about your right to speak out about the trampling of our constitution. As the quote attributed variously to Martin Luther King, Jr., Frederick Nitzsche, and Edmund Burke says:
All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing.
And seriously, you have to see the Olbermann video at the link above. I finally upped my cable subscription to include MSNBC for one reason only, and his initials are, appropriately, KO.
Thank you Lisa, I was hoping to see a diary from you about this.
Keith Olbermann was definitely a must-watch on this last night. I’ve been sending emails of support when he’s done these editorial comments recently (to KOlbermann-at-msnbc.com and viewerservices-at-msnbc.com). MSNBC needs to know that our support exists.
I’ve been feeling a mixture of worry, despair, and helplessness about this, but I’ve decided that best thing to do is to talk to friends and family about this (hopefully without screaming) and help them to WTFU to what is happening before their very eyes.
People so don’t want to believe what’s going on in this country that they bury their heads in the sand and pray they’re just dreaming.
But they’re not. And we need to help them gently pry their heads out and take a good, hard look around.
I was at a conference today, which is why I’ve been offline until now. Someone said something about stealing the constitution in reference to the film National Treasure, saying it was REALLY impossible to steal the constitution. But a British guy near me said, “until this week.” I caught up with him after the talk and said he was right on the money and he said you don’t realize it, but there was a coup six years ago in America. I corrected him and said no, the coup took place over 40 years ago, when they killed President Kennedy because he opposed exactly this sort of “empire.” He thought, nodded, and said, “I think you’re right.”
Good luck with your friends. And thanks for the comment!
Seriously, let’s keep Keoth on the frontpage of MSNBC with this special comment from last night. At the bottom of the page after the transcript you can rate it. Please go and rate it up at that link posted in diary. Keith Olbermann is a flippin hero folks. Thanks for writing this up. Now off to the airport to see if they will allow me to fly today…teehee.
Even if the dems win will they have enough courage to repeal some of the more obnoxious crap the repubs have shoved up this stovepipe?
Even if they get the courage, can they get a veto proof margin of votes?
Even if they get the courage and they have the veto proof vote can they withstand SCOTUS challenges by this president?
Looking at this, we may never be able to put humpty dumpty back together again!
And the presnit apparently has Posse Comitatus rights over the national guard. Suppose he just decides to round us all up and put us in camps?
When Ann Coulter essentially called all Liberals “treasonous” I felt they entertained thoughts of exactly that. Hopefully, the rest of the world wouldn’t let them get away with it. And I think we’d all be surprised and heartened at the number of conservatives that came to our rescue. Or so I hope…!
I’d put it like this:
Habeus Corpus
RIP
1215-2006
I like it.
Did you see the article of the same title by Molly Ivens?
No I hadn’t seen that yet! Thanks for the link.
I can’t believe that several times I spelled it “habeus.” Ack.
So did I. Don’t feel bad – a common mistake.
only in America and No more moral grandstanding.
Hopefully others who embrace the rule of law and the freedom safeguards won’t be tempted to follow.
Good point, Arminius! Much more dramatic too.
KO’s additional commentary:…sir, your words are lies… from last night from C&L WMP and QT avail.
I know in reality that this has actually happened. It did. But some part of me still can’t believe that we, the American People, have actually allowed it to come to this. I can’t let go of the ridiculous hope that this is all one long awful nighmare, and that one of these days I will wake up in the America I know.
Even though bush wanted this bill so badly he as usual afterwards did one of his signing statements(according to article in of all places the airforcetimes I believe)where he specifically detailed 24 items in this bill he may or may not abide by. His dictatorship seems to know no bounds. Why doesn’t he just declare Congress obsolete-even his own rethuglican Congress-and be done with it.
I’m still trying to wrap my head around this and how the general public seems braindead or simply doesn’t care anymore or doesn’t believe that this is really happening and believes the speech bush gave made up of complete lies concerning this whole bill..and once again I do blame the media for standing by with little or no real reporting on the takeover of this country. Do they think they are immune to this law…once they came for ‘whoever’, then they came for the reporters and there was no left to protest, ..you fucken sellout democracy for a buck with no principals, you turncoats.
You are so right. That’s why my core issues continue to be this:
Get our vote back. Without that,nothing we say matters.
Get our media back. Without that, our vote will be undereducated.
Get global warming under control. Without that none of us will live to debate the rest of what we need to focus on.
I wrote to my senators immediately, the day that Bush went to Capitol Hill to lobby for this one, was that Sept 29? 30?
Of course, I had to remind Both Hillary and Chuck to vote against this heinous act, since I have no faith or trust in these DLC DINO’s.
My Congressperson, Charles Rangel, I don’t worry about voting the “wrong way.”
So I tried, but I’ve got Dems (yes, they are I suppose . . .) representing me, but if I lived in one of those Red congressional districts or states, what is there to do? These maniacs take their marching orders from Rove and follow suit.
So that’s where we were, that’s what happened, and I’m not going to feel guilty about it personally. The collective guilt goes to the Congress of the United States and the Cheney Administration.
Anyway, VICTORY over EVIL on Nov 7, 2006!!!!!! Vote Dem!